Image Source: PexelsEmpirical research, including the 2020 study “An Empirical Evaluation of Tax-Loss Harvesting Alpha” and the 2023 study “Expected Loss Harvest from Tax-Loss Harvesting with Direct Indexing,” has found that tax-loss harvesting strategies in separately managed accounts (SMAs) can improve the post-tax returns of an investment portfolio by employing a strategy of selling positions in securities with losses in order to generate capital losses that can be used to offset gains generated in the overall portfolio. While long-term losses are generally hard to realize systematically because stock positions on average appreciate over time, in the short term, volatility allows for the capture of short-term losses. The result is that most losses end up being short term. Those losses can be used to offset highly taxed short-term gains. Among the key findings of the research on tax loss harvesting are:
Direct Indexing and ETFsThe empirical research comparing the tax benefits of direct indexing versus ETFs, including the 2022 study “Optimized Tax Loss Harvesting: A Simple Algorithm and Framework,” and the 2023 study “A Tax-Loss Harvesting Horserace: Direct Indexing versus ETFs” has found that just as intuition suggests, a portfolio of stocks should provide greater opportunities for harvesting, as well as increased consistency because harvesting opportunities can be present in individual holdings even when the market has positive returns.Taking Direct Indexing and Tax-Loss Harvesting to the Next LevelJoseph Liberman, Stanley Krasner, Nathan Sosner, and Pedro Freitas, authors of the September 2023 study “An Empirical Evaluation of Tax-Loss Harvesting Alpha,” examined if the utilization of leverage and long-short strategies motivated by the literature on factor-based investing could improve on the tax benefits of direct indexing and tax-loss harvesting.They began by modeling three types of tax-aware strategies. The first was a direct indexing strategy. The other two represented alternative approaches to long-short factor investing. Strategies of the first type, referred to as “relaxed-constraint,” expressed index beta using individual stocks. For example, a 150/50 strategy would hold 150% of its net asset value in long stocks and 50% of its NAV in short stocks. The second type implemented index beta by holding an index mutual fund or ETF, and used individual stocks to put on the long and short extensions. For example, a 150/50 strategy would hold 100% of its NAV in an index fund, 50% of its NAV in long stocks, and 50% of its NAV in short stocks. They called these “composite long-short.” They then introduced these tax-aware strategies with different levels of leverage and tracking error. Their data sample and strategies were constructed over the Russell 1000 Index universe and tracked the Russell 1000 Index performance. All the strategies were rebalanced at a monthly frequency. In each rebalance, the strategy sought to defer tax gains and realize tax losses while maintaining a tracking error of 1% with respect to the benchmark index for the long-only direct indexing strategy. The tax-aware long-short factor strategies were modeled as follows.In each monthly rebalance, relaxed constraint strategies maximized expected active pretax returns, deferred gains, and realized losses subject to tracking error and leverage constraints. They derived expected active pretax returns from an alpha model based on value, momentum, and quality investment themes, or factors, with each factor receiving an equal risk weight. They modeled three levels of leverage and tracking error: 150/50 at 2% tracking error, 200/100 at 4% tracking error, and 250/150 at 6% tracking error.The composite long-short strategies consisted of a passive hypothetical Russell 1000 Index fund and beta-zero, long-short portfolios of individual stocks (market-neutral portfolios).They simulated 27 10-year-long histories. The simulations began in January of each year from 1986 to 2012, with the last 10-year simulation beginning in January 2012 and ending in December 2021. After a strategy was seeded on the first day of the simulation, there were no contributions or redemptions of capital during the simulation period. For computing tax benefits, they used the top federal tax bracket rates in the year 2022 inclusive of 3.8% net investment income tax: 40.8% for short-term capital gains and ordinary income, and 23.8% for long-term capital gains and qualified dividend income. Tax benefits were computed monthly as a percentage of the month’s beginning NAV and then annualized. They assumed that capital gains were taxed according to their character (short term at 40.8% rate and long term at 23.8% rate), all capital losses (whether long-term or short-term) were used to offset only long-term capital gains, and a 10% effective tax rate was applied to incremental unrealized gains.Here is a summary of their key findings:On average, net losses offered by direct indexing tapered off after the first few years since inception – the cumulative net capital loss amounted to 13% in year one, crossed a 20% mark in year three, and closer and closer towards 30% in the last five years of the 10-year simulations.The results are hypothetical results and are NOT an indicator of future results and do NOT represent returns that any investor actually attained. Indexes are unmanaged and do not reflect management or trading fees, and one cannot invest directly in an index.
The Major Source of Tax Benefits is Surprising!Krasner and Sosner extended their analysis on the tax benefits of long-short strategies in their study “Loss Harvesting or Gain Deferral? A Surprising Source of Tax Benefits of Tax-Aware Long-Short Strategies,” published in the Summer 2024 issue of The Journal of Wealth Management. They constructed two types of 250/150 long-short strategies: tax-aware and tax-agnostic. The two strategies are identical in every respect except that the tax-agnostic strategy removed the tax term from the objective function of the long-short portfolio optimization routine, focusing exclusively on maximizing net-of-transaction-costs alpha, subject to volatility, leverage, and beta-zero constraints. Portfolios were rebalanced monthly, adjusting the weights of the index fund and the long-short stock portfolio to maintain a beta-one index exposure as well as the target leverage and tracking error of the overall strategy. Expected pre-tax returns were derived from an alpha model based on value, momentum, and quality investment themes, or factors, with each factor receiving an equal risk weight. Their data sample covered the 34 rolling three-year periods from 1986 through 2021.Following is a summary of their key findings:
Krasner and Sosner noted:
“By investing in the tax-aware instead of the tax-agnostic strategy, over a three-year period, an investor gives up about 12% in pre-tax return and, in return, achieves an approximately 125% greater cumulative net loss. If this net loss is fully utilized to offset long-term gains taxed at a 23.8% rate, its value to the investor is 30%, which is more than two times greater than the reduction in pre-tax return.”
Investor TakeawaysWith the decimalization of prices, reduction in commissions/fees from broker-dealers and custodians, and the competition from high-frequency traders, trading costs have fallen sharply, reducing the hurdles to effective tax management. In addition, financial technology has greatly improved, and custodians are required to track cost basis, making reporting much easier. As tax-aware investing, including tax-aware long-short investing, has become more cost-effective, it has become more important for investors.Among the key takeaways is that even direct indexing strategies need to deviate from benchmark weights to achieve their loss-harvesting benefits, carrying the risk of underperformance relative to the benchmark. In addition, direct indexing strategies will have higher transaction costs, which result from the loss-harvesting trades, and possibly higher management fees due to added complexity. Leverage and shorting can further increase risks and costs of tax-aware strategies. And the tracking error of strategies that utilize leverage and shorting will likely be higher than that of direct indexing, leading to a higher risk of underperforming the benchmark. With that said, these strategies will likely have greater opportunities to realize capital losses than direct indexing. In addition, higher leverage leads to financing costs, and the higher complexity of managing long-short strategies will likely result in higher management fees.A third takeaway is that tax-aware, long-short factor strategies allow investors to enjoy not only substantial tax benefits but also a diversifying pretax alpha derived from factor investing. With that said, the results demonstrated that the speed with which 100% cumulative net capital loss is achieved by relaxed constraint and composite long-short strategies depends on the level of leverage and tracking error an investor is prepared to tolerate. Said differently, economic risk and tax benefits are correlated.More By This Author:Data-Driven Approach To Clustering Similar Macroeconomic Regimes Explaining The Performance Of Low-priced Stocks: The Penny Stock Anomaly Moving Average Distance And Time-Series Momentum
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